Watch Bill Gates Confirm Everybody's Worst Fears About Common Core

Bill GatesCommon Core critics contend that national
education standards will erode local decision-making on school
issues while promoting a national curriculum of sorts. Most Core
proponents generally dismiss these concerns as unfounded.

But Bill Gates, a major financial backer of the standards, was
atypically direct about what peddlers of standardization are trying
to accomplish during a
Politico
event on Monday. Rather than defend Common Core
from accusations of creeping nationalization, he finally confirmed
that yes, this is exactly what Core proponents are trying to
accomplish—less local autonomy is a good thing, as he
says in the video
:

“Common Core I would have thought of as more of a technocratic
issue. The basic idea of, ‘should we share an electrical plug
across the country?’ Well, you can get partisan about that I
suppose. Should Georgia have a different railroad width than
everybody else? Should they teach multiplication in a different
way? Oh that’s brilliant [sarcasm], who came up with that idea?
Common Core, the idea that what you should know at various grades,
that that should be well-structured and you should really insist on
kids knowing something so you can build on it, I did not really
expect that to become a big political issue.”

There you have it. Gates views the education system—the many
myriad ways Americans could pass on knowledge to their children—as
akin to choosing the correct railroad track size. The implication
is obvious: after all, there is only one right railroad track size!
Similarly, there is only one correct way to teach children, and all
children must be taught that way, according to Gates.

This way of thinking goes against
everything the reform movement
has come to understand over the
last few decades about what works in schools: greater
standardization is not the answer; schools languish
under stifling centralization; every kid is unique and has
different educational needs; and local authorities—especially
parents—are best suited to the task of plotting their children’s
educational paths. 

Nurturing the mind of a child is an infinitely more complex task
than choosing an electrical plug. It’s not as simple as plugging
the right cord into a child’s brain and flipping a switch.

Gates says that Georgia shouldn’t teach multiplication a
different way than the rest of the country. But what if there is a
style or method that works in Georgia but not New York? What if
Georgia discovers a better way? 

And even if it were true that all U.S. student should be
learning the exact same thing in the exact same way,
no reasonable person
could be persuaded that Common Core is it.
That’s because scant evidence exists in Common Core’s favor—backers
are relying on little more than their faith in an unproven
methodology.

Standardization isn’t good, and these specific standards aren’t
good (or at least, there isn’t a lot of evidence in their favor).
Which side in this debate is being unreasonably ideological,
again?

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2014/09/30/watch-bill-gates-confirm-everybodys-wor
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